HM Treasury

Charter for Budget Responsibility: Summer Budget 2015 update

Lord O'Neill of Gatley: My right honourable friend the Chancellor of the Exchequer (George Obsorne) has today made the following Written Ministerial Statement. Today I have published a draft updated Charter for Budget Responsibility, copies of which have been deposited in the Libraries of both Houses. It sets out a new fiscal framework to entrench a commitment to reach surplus and maintain it in normal times. The draft Charter includes modified guidance to the Office for Budget Responsibility and has been published in line with Section 6(4) of the Budget Responsibility and National Audit Act. This requires that if the Treasury proposes to modify the guidance to the Office for Budget Responsibility included in the Charter, a draft of the modified guidance must be published at least 28 days before the modified Charter is laid before Parliament. The updated Charter will be laid before Parliament, and a debate and vote scheduled, in the autumn of 2015. 



Charter for Budget Responsibility - Summer Budget 
(PDF Document, 211.48 KB)





This statement has also been made in the House of Commons: 
HCWS87

Ministry of Justice

Cremation Regulation

Lord Faulks: My honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice, Minister for Women, Equalities and Family Justice (Caroline Dinenage) has made the following Written Statement."On 1 June 2015 David Jenkins published his report into the way infant cremations were carried out at Emstrey Crematorium in Shropshire between 1996 and 2012. The report established that during this time the crematorium failed to obtain ashes to return to families after the cremation of a baby or stillborn child. In addition, in Scotland in 2014 Lord Bonomy’s Infant Cremation Commission (ICC) reported that parents had in some cases been incorrectly told that there had been, or would be, no ashes from their infants’ cremations. Scotland has already done much work in response to the ICC’s report. The Emstrey Report, however, made several recommendations for government. It also recommended that government consider the ICC’s recommendations. I am clear that bereaved parents should not have to experience the additional grief that those affected by the issues in Emstrey have faced. I am sadly aware of other bereaved families having had similar experiences elsewhere in England. I am determined that the government should do what it can to make sure that following a cremation infant ashes are returned to bereaved families. We are considering the Emstrey and ICC recommendations in depth and will consult on proposals for a number of changes to the relevant legislation, the Cremation (England and Wales) Regulations 2008, later this year."


This statement has also been made in the House of Commons: 
HCWS88